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Topic: Citsuma Prague (Read 22404 times)

I'd like to share a picture of my Citsuma Prague which is the most bizarre citrus I have. It has grown pretty well but it seems it wants to grow in all directions but upwards. If I let it grow it would be much wider than tall.I know Ilya has one, too. I'd love to see some pictures.

You have very nice specimen. I have this Citsuma in the ground since 2004, but it is grafted on very weak rootstock and has not grown much. Never damaged, but flowering is very sporadic and fruits rapidly abort.

Last year I regrafted it on high stem of very strong poncirus, hope it will finally give some fruits.Sylvain in Dordogne have very nice plant, almost 2 meters high , producing sweet fruits of very good quality.

Millet,Its origin is not yet clear. Leaves are a mixture of bi- tri- or monofoliates. The fruits are almost satsuma like, no poncirus smell or taste.There is suspicion that it is a chimera between poncirus and satsuma, but strangely enough even stems and leaves do not have odor or taste of poncirus. Scientists in Brno show that the nuclei from its cells have homogeneous DNA content, that does not definitely proves an absence of chimerism , but points more to the hybrid origin of this citrus.On the other hand, Roberto from Wien observed an emergence of poncirus like branch distantly from grafting point.It could be some second generation poncirus-satsuma hybrid with unstable genome, but no definite proof for this exists for the moment.

Thank you so much for the information, Ilya. My plant is a strong grower but I would still like to graft it onto a taller poncirus because I like tree forms better. I will let it grow until it flowers and try to graft it then. I need more time anyway because my poncirus rootstocks are still very small since I have to grown them from seed.

I looked up chimera and looks like it is two different species fused together. Do we call this citrandarin chimera instead of hybrid because it has a good mandarin quality fruit on a trifoliata tree, whearas most trifoliate hybrids have a tree body and fruit that is a mix or blending of the two parent trees?

It is believed for a long time to be a chimera, but its origin is very obscure. It is either originated in Abkhazia region of the USSR or in Prague, Czechoslovakia. In USSR several attempts were made to produce poncirus/citrus chimera by the induction and subsequent regeneration of massive callus at the grafting point. By this, they believed to produce plants containing cells from two species (chimeras). Most of such plants are unstable, giving branches of pure species, but occasionally a stable, so called periclinal chimera can be produced.In the recent study Czech scientists isolated the cell nuclei from this plant, stained their genetic material (DNA) by fluorescent die and determined the intensity of fluorescence signal from individual nuclei. Since the genome of different citruses is slightly different in size, they hopped to see two peaks of fluorescent intensity if it is satsuma/poncirus chimera. They observed only one, so it is either not a chimera but a hybrid or chimera between poncirus with some hybrid having approximately the same genome size as poncirus. I guess only molecular markers can definitely resolve the origin of this very strange plant.

According to Snek, there are three hybrids/chimeras known in former Czechoslovakia.One is hybrid Unshiu x Poncirus selected by professor Pospisil in seventies, the plant is still in greenhouse of university in Prague.

Radoslav,Have you seen the recent photos of this surviving plant?For me the old black and white picture of it looks very similiar to what I have in the garden.On other hand, the picture from Riverside is also similiar, although their plant is described as chimera from Abkhazia.

It has grown pretty well but it seems it wants to grow in all directions but upwards.

After few years the shoots go strait to the sky.

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Sylvain in Dordogne have very nice plant, almost 2 meters high , producing sweet fruits of very good quality.

The tallest is now 2.50m. The second one is about 2m high and last year I made a third that is a little less than 2m. The last one is an over-graft on a '5 stars' grafted on PT. It is very vigorous.

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Leaves are a mixture of bi- tri- or monofoliates.

Like shown on the Ilya11's picture bifoliate and trifoliates are very rare. Most are deformed monofoliates.

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The fruits are almost satsuma like

Not 'almost', they are pure satsuma fruits.

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There is suspicion that it is a chimera between poncirus and satsuma

For me there is no doubt, it is a chimera.This spring one very big flower appeared just at the same time than the poncirus flowers. Looking exactly the same. The Prague chimeras bloom nearly one month later with small flowers. The fruitlet issued from this flower is already big and have a velvet skin.Now we know that the poncirus that made the chimera is of the large flowers kind.Last year I had one seed from the fruits (the first one). It gave three seedlings that are pure mandarins.

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It could be this variety in UCR collection

I don't think so. The fruits are very different. This one looks more like an orange than like a mandarin.

Ąll what i know about this case, is that snek thinks, that Voss during his visit in greenhouse in university of Prague dig out and took with him plant that was not the plant snek calls hybrid Unshiu x Poncirus, selected by professor Pospisil, but Chimere no.19 (unshiu poncirus) from USSR. Voss gave it name citsuma Prague, but it is not the citsuma Prague which for example Snek and some others have in their collections. Chimere no.19 , grows upright, while so called hybrid grows more like flying dragon, or willow.